Trump to
impose tariffs on imports from Canada, Mexico and China
US neighbors
hit with 25% tariff and China with 10% as Trudeau pledges ‘forceful but
reasonable’ response
Callum Jones
in New York, Leyland Cecco in Toronto, Thomas Graham in Mexico City and George
Chidi
Fri 31 Jan
2025 21.13 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jan/31/trump-tariffs-canada-mexico-china
Donald Trump
will impose sweeping tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China on Saturday, the White
House said, potentially setting the stage for a damaging trade war between the
US and three of its biggest trading partners.
Goods
exported from Canada and Mexico to the US will be hit with a 25% tariff, while
products from China face a 10% levy, the White House press secretary, Karoline
Leavitt, told reporters on Friday.
Leavitt
dismissed reports that the US would delay implementation of the tariffs by a
month as “false”, claiming that “starting tomorrow, those tariffs will be in
place”.
Canada has
pledged to retaliate with a “forceful but reasonable” response. Mexico has also
drawn up plans, but declined to provide details. China has said it will “firmly
defend” its interests.
Trump has
claimed imposing duties on goods from overseas will raise hundreds of billions
of dollars for the federal government, while forcing countries – even two of
America’s closest allies – to bend to his demands.
But
economists have repeatedly warned that higher tariffs, a key pillar of Trump’s
economic strategy, risk raising prices for millions of Americans, challenging
the president’s pledge to bring down prices “rapidly” amid a wave of
frustration over the cost of living.
Investors
appear apprehensive, too. Stocks on Wall Street fell after the White House
press briefing, with the Dow Jones industrial average down 0.5% in New York.
After his
election victory in November, the president homed in on Canada and Mexico, the
US’s neighbors, and China, demanding they do more to stop “illegal aliens” and
drugs such as fentanyl from crossing into the US. Trump said he would impose
tariffs immediately upon entering office, but hours after his inauguration said
he would do so on 1 February instead.
Mexico and
Canada have insisted in recent days that they stand prepared for Trump to make
good on his threat.
“We have
plan A, plan B and plan C for whatever the US government decides,” Claudia
Sheinbaum, the Mexican president, said on Friday. The country has previously
signaled that it would “have to” respond with duties of its own if hit with US
tariffs.
Justin
Trudeau, the Canadian prime minister, warned of potentially “difficult times”
if Trump proceeds with tariffs.
On Trudeau’s
warning that Canada would put forward a “forceful but reasonable” response to
US duties, Leavitt shot back at the White House press briefing: “I think Justin
Trudeau would be wise to talk to President Trump directly before pushing
outlandish comments like that to the media.”
Chrystia
Freeland, Canada’s former trade negotiator and finance minister, who is vying
to succeed Trudeau, proposed a 100% tariff on all Tesla vehicles and on US
wine, beer and spirits. “We need to be very targeted, very surgical, very
precise,” she told the Canadian Press – in this case, targeting the Tesla
chief, Elon Musk, at the heart of Trump’s inner circle.
Trump, who
mooted a 20% universal tariff on all foreign imports from across the world
while running for re-election, has made clear that other key markets, including
the European Union, are also in his sights.
In his
inaugural address, the president laid out his plan to overhaul the US’s
economic ties with the world. “Instead of taxing our citizens to enrich other
countries, we will tariff and tax foreign countries to enrich our citizens,” he
declared, claiming this would lead to “massive amounts of money pouring into
our Treasury, coming from foreign sources”.
Tariffs are
not charged on the exporter, but the importer – in this case, firms based in
the US – and are often passed on to consumers. This is why economists caution
that increasing duties on imports could exacerbate inflation.
Undeterred,
Trump has launched a consultation into the creation of an “external revenue
service” for the collection of tariffs.
The
conservative Tax Foundation has estimated that Trump imposed about $80bn worth
of tariffs on about $380bn worth of products in 2018 and 2019, describing it as
“one of the largest tax increases in decades”. The Biden administration kept
most of the tariffs in place, and increased tariffs on an additional $18bn of
Chinese goods, including semiconductors and electric vehicles.
In a speech
earlier this week, Trump claimed his officials would introduce tariffs on
overseas semiconductors, drugs and steel “in the very near future”, singling
out Taiwan and suggesting that such duties would incentivize manufacturers to
make such goods in the US.
Imposing
tariffs, at least using the conventional playbook, takes time. A necessary
investigation requires 270 days by statute. But Trump’s officials have
reportedly been exploring other options, such as the declaration of an economic
emergency, in an attempt to move more quickly.
US
importers, or their customs broker, are required by Customs and Border
Protection to file an entry summary for goods arriving into the US, with
details about their shipment, such as what it is, how much it is worth, and
where it is from. Goods are assigned a specific code according to the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule, which has the applicable tariff rates.
Importers
are responsible for paying the duties calculated on the value of the goods they
have imported.
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